“He proceeded to kiss me. He touched me…I yelled for him to stop. He said, ‘You see, if you yell stop, I stop. I’m not doing anything wrong. I’m not doing anything you don’t want me to do,'” the victim said Tuesday.

But she said despite her resistance, Weberman continued to molest her.

“Saying stop didn’t seem to work….I didn’t know how to fight back. I was numb,” the teen said.

At one point, the teen said she stopped eating for three days. The accuser said she was so depressed she couldn’t even talk to Weberman.

The teen also described another incident in which she claimed Weberman came to her home.

“He got into bed with me and I wanted to die,” the teen stated in court on Tuesday.

She said she eventually was able to tell a school counselor what was taking place.

Weberman has pleaded not guilty to charges of committing a criminal sex act, rape, endangering the welfare of a child and sexual abuse.

But on Wednesday, the victim’s family said there seems to have been a change in the Satmar community’s view of the case. The teen’s aunt said many have come out in support of the victim.

“God forbid there are other children who are abused and molested, this is a message to all children to speak up because we are not going to allow it and that’s the main thing – that she is suffering so much,” Giddy Goldman told Cornell.

Victim advocate Rabbi Yaakov Horowitz said Wednesday that it is a sign that attitudes within the community are evolving.

“Look around the courtroom and you’ll see that things are changing. When we had Weberman’s first hearing, we had about 15, 20 people. Now we have a packed courtroom, people are waiting in the halls,” Horowitz told Cornell.